Chapter 4 Managerial Accounting PowerPoint
Chapter 4 Managerial Accounting PowerPoint
Chapter 4 Managerial Accounting PowerPoint
Product-Costing Syst
Chapter 4
Comparison of Job-Order Costing and
Process Costing
• In many ways, job-order costing and process costing are similar. Both product-costing systems have the same
ultimate purpose-assignment of production costs to units of output. Moreover, the flow of costs through the
manufacturing accounts is the same in the two systems.
• Flow of Costs: flow of costs in two process-costing situations; one with a single production department and
one with two production departments used in sequence.
• As goods are finished, costs are transferred to Finished-Goods Inventory. During the period when goods are
sold, the product costs are transferred to Cost of Goods Sold. In the two-department case, when goods are
finished in the first production department, costs accumulated in the Work-in-Process Inventory account for
production Department A are transferred to the Work-in-Process Inventory account for production
Department B
Flow of Costs
journal entries
1. As direct material and direct labor are used in production Department A, these costs are added to the Work-in-Process
Inventory account for Department A. Overhead is applied using a predetermined overhead rate. The predetermined
overhead rate is computed in the same way in job-order and process costing.
2. When production Department A completes its work on some units of product, these units are transferred to production
Department B. The costs assigned to these goods are transferred from the Work-in-Process Inventory account for Department
A to the Work-in-Process Inventory account for Department B. In Department B, the costs assigned to these partially
completed products are called transferred-in costs.
4. Goods are completed in production Department B and transferred to the finished-goods warehouse.
Finished-Goods Inventory ............................................................................... 130,000
Work-in-Process Inventory: Production Department B .......................... 130,000
5. Goods are sold
Cost of Goods Sold ......................................................................................... 125,000
Finished-Goods Inventory ...................................................................... 125,000
Differences Between Job-Order and Process Costing
• In job-order costing, costs are accumulated by job order and recorded on job-cost records. The
cost of each unit in a particular job order is found by dividing the total cost of the job order by the
number of units in the job.
• In process costing, costs are accumulated by department, rather than by job order or batch. The cost per unit
is found by averaging the total costs incurred over the units produced.
Differences Between Job-Order and Process
Costing (cont.….)
• The term equivalent units is used in process costing to refer to the amount of manufacturing activity that has been applied to a
batch of physical units.
• equivalent units are the units in production multiplied by the percentage of those units that are complete or those that are in
process
Example: you’ve mixed enough sugar to make 600,000 units of candy. Assume that ending work in process is 25
percent complete for all components of production (material, labor, and overhead). (25 % of the units are
unfinished)
Units Complete Equivalent Units Total
Completed and
600,000 100 percent 600,000
transferred
Work in process,
600,000 25 percent 150,000
ending
Equivalent units 750,000
Cont.……
• suppose the total costs of $101,800.
Now the cost per unit = 101,800 / 750,000 = $0.1357
• transfer of the partially completed basketballs from preparation department to finishing department
• The conversion costs applied in the Finishing Department are recorded as follows:
• The professional balls are transferred to the Packaging Department, and the scholastic balls are transferred to
finished goods.
• Raw-material (packaging) costs and conversion costs are recorded in the Packaging Department as follows:
• the professional basketballs are transferred to finished goods
Question
1. Explain the primary differences between job-order and process
costing.
2. What are the purposes of a product-costing system?
3. Define the term equivalent unit and explain how the concept is
used in process costing.
Q4) Rainbow Glass Company manufactures decorative glass products. The firm employs a process-costing system for its
manufacturing operations. All direct materials are added at the beginning of the process, and conversion costs are incurred
uniformly throughout the process. The company’s production schedule for October follows.
Required: Calculate each of the following amounts using weighted-average process costing.